Building Catalytic Reactions One Electron at a Time

IF 17.7 1区 化学 Q1 CHEMISTRY, MULTIDISCIPLINARY
Julian G. West*, 
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Classical education in organic chemistry and catalysis, not the least my own, has centered on two-electron transformations, from nucleophilic attack to oxidative addition. The focus on two-electron chemistry is well-founded, as this brand of chemistry has enabled incredible feats of synthesis, from the development of life-saving pharmaceuticals to the production of ubiquitous commodity chemicals. With that said, this approach is in many ways complementary to the approach of nature, where enzymes frequently make use of single-electron “radical” steps to achieve challenging reactions with exceptional selectivity, including light detection and C–H hydroxylation. While the power of radical elementary steps is undeniable, the fundamental understanding of─and ability to apply─these in catalysis remains underdeveloped, constraining the palette with which chemists can make new reactions.

Motivation to remedy this traditional underemphasis on radical catalysis has been intensified by the runaway success of outer-sphere photoredox catalysis, not only confirming the versatility of radicals in anthropogenic catalysis but also teaching the value of robust and well-understood catalytic cycles for reaction design. Indeed, I would argue the success of outer-sphere photoredox catalysis has been fueled by strong fundamental understanding of its underlying radical elementary steps, with consideration of single-electron transfer (SET) energetics allowing new reactions to be designed de novo with enviable confidence. However, outer-sphere photoredox catalysis is an outlier in this regard, with other mechanistic approaches remaining underexplored.

Our research group is part of a growing movement to expand the vocabulary of synthetic radical catalysis beyond the traditional outer-sphere photoredox SET manifold, assembling new cycles comprised of hydrogen atom transfer (HAT), light-induced homolysis (LIH), and radical ligand transfer (RLT) steps in new combinations to achieve challenging transformations. These efforts have been made possible by the ever-growing understanding of these radical elementary steps and discovery of catalyst systems with significant mechanistic flexibility, most recently iron/thiol (Fe/S) cocatalysis.

In this Account, I will focus on our efforts applying HAT and LIH steps in Fe/S cocatalysis, sharing broad guidelines we have found helpful for using these steps and demonstrating how they can be combined to make new reactions using three case studies: radical hydrogenation (HAT + HAT), decarboxylative protonation (LIH + HAT), and alkene hydrofluoroalkylation (LIH + HAT, with an intervening radical alkene addition). These efforts have highlighted the importance of several key parameters, including bond dissociation energy (BDE) and radical polarity, and I hope our findings similarly provide a valuable framework to others designing new radical catalytic reactions.

Abstract Image

逐个电子建立催化反应
有机化学和催化方面的经典教育,尤其是我自己的教育,都以双电子转化为中心,从亲核反应到氧化加成。对双电子化学的关注是有充分依据的,因为这种化学品牌促成了令人难以置信的合成壮举,从救命药物的开发到无处不在的商品化学品的生产,不一而足。在自然界中,酶经常利用单电子 "自由基 "步骤来实现具有特殊选择性的挑战性反应,包括光探测和 C-H 羟基化反应。尽管自由基基本步骤的威力毋庸置疑,但人们对自由基基本步骤的基本了解以及在催化中应用自由基基本步骤的能力仍然欠缺,这限制了化学家进行新反应的调色板。外球体光氧化催化的巨大成功,不仅证实了自由基在人为催化中的多功能性,而且也让人们认识到了催化循环在反应设计中的价值。事实上,我认为外层光氧化催化的成功得益于对其基本自由基基本步骤的深刻理解,对单电子转移(SET)能量学的考虑使得新反应的设计具有令人羡慕的信心。我们的研究小组是日益壮大的运动的一部分,该运动旨在将合成自由基催化的词汇扩展到传统的外层光氧化 SET 层面之外,以新的组合方式构建由氢原子转移 (HAT)、光诱导均解 (LIH) 和自由基配体转移 (RLT) 步骤组成的新循环,以实现具有挑战性的转化。这些努力之所以能够实现,是因为人们对这些基元步骤的理解不断加深,并发现了具有显著机械灵活性的催化剂体系,最近的催化剂是铁/硫醇(Fe/S)共催化反应。在本报告中,我将重点介绍我们在 Fe/S 催化反应中应用 HAT 和 LIH 步骤的工作,分享我们发现的有助于使用这些步骤的广泛指导原则,并通过三个案例研究展示如何将这些步骤结合起来以产生新的反应:自由基氢化(HAT + HAT)、脱羧质子化(LIH + HAT)和烯烃氢氟烷基化(LIH + HAT,中间有自由基烯烃加成)。这些工作凸显了几个关键参数的重要性,包括键解离能(BDE)和自由基极性,我希望我们的研究结果同样能为其他设计新自由基催化反应的人提供一个有价值的框架。
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来源期刊
Accounts of Chemical Research
Accounts of Chemical Research 化学-化学综合
CiteScore
31.40
自引率
1.10%
发文量
312
审稿时长
2 months
期刊介绍: Accounts of Chemical Research presents short, concise and critical articles offering easy-to-read overviews of basic research and applications in all areas of chemistry and biochemistry. These short reviews focus on research from the author’s own laboratory and are designed to teach the reader about a research project. In addition, Accounts of Chemical Research publishes commentaries that give an informed opinion on a current research problem. Special Issues online are devoted to a single topic of unusual activity and significance. Accounts of Chemical Research replaces the traditional article abstract with an article "Conspectus." These entries synopsize the research affording the reader a closer look at the content and significance of an article. Through this provision of a more detailed description of the article contents, the Conspectus enhances the article's discoverability by search engines and the exposure for the research.
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